ADAM OLSEN -- We are being challenged today to take a deep long look at ourselves, our history and our modern society
Here are my initial comments on the findings
of the Missing and
Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls Inquiry.
I have not yet had the opportunity to read
the full report and will be taking time in the next few days to look at it in
more detail. However, here is the statement I made as the spokesperson on
behalf of the B.C. Green Caucus.
"Red Dress" by "Sheila Sund"
used under license "CC by 2.0"
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The Reclaiming Power and
Place
report
says the thousands of Indigenous women and girls who were murdered or
disappeared across the country in recent decades are victims of a
"Canadian genocide” characterized by the disproportionate level of
violence these communities face within Canada through "state actions and
inactions rooted in colonialism and colonial ideologies."
We are being challenged today to take a deep
long look at ourselves, our history and our modern society. There may be a
desire to downplay the result of this inquiry because it is difficult to hear
these words. The term genocide has been reserved for other people, in far away
countries at another time. As elected officials we now face the strongest test
of our leadership.
How will we respond? Do we downplay it and
state the language was too strong? Or do we embrace this time as an opportunity
to make the changes in our policy and ensure we bring light to this dark part
of the culture that has allowed and continues to enable this to define who we
are as a country.
We have normalized these inequalities in
Canadian society. Let the conclusion of this inquiry serve as a wake-up call to
the atrocities our society has allowed to be inflicted on Indigenous women,
girls, and two-spirited people.
In response to the results of this inquiry I
am wary of colonial language that references developing a ‘path forward’ or
‘next steps.’ Federal and provincial governments must immediately prioritize
the inquiry’s recommendations. People should not be asked for patience for
their equality, safety, and survival.
Not only have these women, girls, two spirit
people, and their families suffered greatly, they’ve bravely shared their
testimony so that we can better understand what is happening and how to stop
it. From this point forward, every day we fail to heed their teachings we are
complicit.
To every young Indigenous person in Canada
feeling scared today as they read the results of this inquiry, I am sorry. I
see you. I stand with you. And I and my B.C. Green colleagues will fight for
your future.
Adam Olsen ... is the Green
Party Member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia for Saanich North
and the Islands.
Born in Victoria, BC in 1976, Adam has lived,
worked and played his entire life on the Saanich Peninsula.
He is a member of Tsartlip First Nation (W̱JOȽEȽP), where he and his wife, Emily, are raising their
two children, Silas and Ella.
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